Golden Rice & Golden Crops for Human Nutrition Golden Rice & Golden Crops for Human Nutrition Discovery - Development - Delivery ¾ Context and Purpose ¾ Technology Development ¾ Potential ¾ Where it stands ¾ Beyond approval ¾ Beyond approval P. Beyer We Seed the World, Tutzing , 2013 Provitamin A
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Golden Rice & Golden Crops for Human NutritionGolden Rice & Golden Crops for Human NutritionDiscovery - Development - Delivery
Context and Purpose
Technology Development
Potential
Where it stands
Beyond approvalBeyond approval
P. BeyerWe Seed the World, Tutzing , 2013
Provitamin A
Context and Purpose
Population growth fading resourcesPopulation growth - fading resources
Source S. Sanyal „The Nation“ Nov. 1st, 2011
Context and Purpose
Share of Energy Source & Food Budget in Rural BangladeshStaples arecheapest
Source: H. Bouis, IFPRI
Philippines Rice Price (Retail)
A trend1999
Source: FAO, GIEWS foodprice data & analysis tool
1999 2012
Directly or indirectly plants provideContext and Purpose
Directly, or indirectly, plants provide all of Humanity’s foody
More of our food comes from fewer species (globally, 54% f i d h t)54% from corn, rice and wheat).
Loss of biochemical diversity in the diet.
Plants, in principle provide all macro -and micro-nutrients required but the latter are very unevenlynutrients required, but the latter are very unevenly distributed.
Ri f i t
Milled grain: Provit A (-) Folate (-) Iron (-) Zinc (-)Leaf: Provit A (+) Folate (+) Iron (+) Zinc (+)
Rice, for instance
Leaf: Provit A (+) Folate (+) Iron (+) Zinc (+)
Context and Purpose
Hidden Hunger“ is long known„Hidden Hunger is long knownSupplementation – Fortification - Education – Diversificationdid t di t th bl (d it d )did not eradicate the problem (despite progress made)
The Copenhagen Consensus 201216 i t t th f i t t (d di d f d i bilit )16 investments worthy of investment (decending order of desirability)
1. Bundeled micronutrient interventions to fight hunger and improve education2. …Malaria2. …Malaria3. …Childhood Immunization4. …Schoolchildren deworming5. …Tubeculosis treatment6 I i ld h6. …Increase yield enhancement7 – 13 …14. …HIV vaccine R&D15. – 16.5. 6.
The Millenium Goals189 countries agreed in 1990 to reduce significantly within 25 years suffering189 countries agreed in 1990 to reduce significantly within 25 years sufferingfrom malnutrition and the mortality rate among children under 5 years of age
Biofortification: A complementary interventionContext and Purpose
p yCrop plants are being fortified by means of their own biosynthetic (vitamins) orphysiological (minerals) capacities achievable throughphysiological (minerals) capacities, achievable through
Zi h i t t i bilit i f 16 28 (T tZinc: much more important variability, ranging from 16 – 28 ppm (Target: 24 ppm)
G ld RiG ld Ri tt bb b db dGolden Rice Golden Rice cannotcannot bebe bredbred
…recombinant DNA technology is necessarygy y
Breeding where possible
Genetic modification where required
The need for vitamin AContext and Purpose
The need for vitamin AA conservative estimation:
Globally, approximately 670,000 children die e er ear beca se
A conservative estimation:
children die every year because they are vitamin A–deficient.Another 350,000 children goAnother 350,000 children go blind.More than 90 million children in Southeast Asia suffer from vitamin A deficiency, more than in any other region.y gMore than 190 million preschool children and 19 million pregnant women are vitamin A deficient
Source: Global prevalence of vitamin A deficiencyin populations at risk 1995–2005WHO Global Database on Vitamin A Deficiency
women are vitamin A deficient, globally
The need for vitamin AContext and Purpose
The need for vitamin AA conservative estimation: Provitamin A Biofortified Crops
Globally, approximately 670,000 children die e er ear beca se
A conservative estimation: p
children die every year because they are vitamin A–deficient.Another 350,000 children go
ReisCassavaAnother 350,000 children go blind.More than 90 million children in
SorghumBananaMais
ReisCassava
Southeast Asia suffer from vitamin A deficiency, more than in any other region.
MaisReis
Potato
y gMore than 190 million preschool children and 19 million pregnant women are vitamin A deficient
Source: Global prevalence of vitamin A deficiencyin populations at risk 1995–2005WHO Global Database on Vitamin A Deficiency
women are vitamin A deficient, globally
Vitamin A deficiency in primary target Context and Purpose
countries Children, 6 Months to 5 Years
In the Philippines• Approximately 1.7 million children aged 6
th t 5 ff t dmonths to 5 years are affected.• Subclinical vitamin A deficiency affects one out
of every ten pregnant women.of every ten pregnant women.
In BangladeshIn Bangladesh• 1 out of 5 children aged 6 months to 5 years are
estimated to be vitamin A-deficient• Among pregnant women, 1 out of 4 are affected
by vitamin A deficiency
11Source: Philippine Government Statistics 1998, 2003
Symptoms of Vitamin A DeficiencyContext and Purpose
Symptoms of Vitamin A DeficiencyNight blindnessNight blindnessIrreversible blindness (Xerophthalmia)AnemiaAnemia Impaired immunity exacerbates infectious disease (measles)disease (measles)Morbidity & impaired developmentMortalityMortalityMost at risk: Children under 5; pregnant and lactating mothers in rural areaslactating mothers in rural areas
Providing adequate amounts of vitamin A could reduce overall child mortality by 23‐34%.
AssemblyAssembly‐‐lineline technologiestechnologiesTechnology Development
E7E8E3E4E6
E7E8E5
E2 E1E3
Precursor
Intermediates
Expressed genesDNA mRNA
ProductDNA, mRNA
AssemblyAssembly‐‐lineline technologiestechnologiesTechnology Development
E7E8E3E4E6
E7E8E5
E2 E1E3
Precursor
Intermediates
Expressed genesDNA mRNA
ProductDNA, mRNA
Technology Development
The Golden Rice principle: Filling a gapOPPOPP OPP
Screen for seed colour, gene copy number, integration quality, fertility, etc.integration quality, fertility, etc.
Preselect six “Golden Rice 2” events for further screening and development
„Shades of Golden“GR1 „Provitamin A increase in GR2:
ca. 10-fold over GR1
ca. 25-fold over prototype
GR2PrototypeWT
The essentials apply to various crops, likeTechnology Development
pp y p ,
1. Cassava (PSY only)
• Ranks 5th among staple crops directly consumed• Ranks 5th among staple crops directly consumed (No. 1 in Sub‐Saharan Africa). Provides food security.
• Very low in micronutrients• Very low in micronutrientsProvit A (mostly) 1‐5 µg/g; VitE, 1 µg/g; Iron 5 ppm, Zinc 1 ppm (fresh weight)
Welsch et al. (2010) Plant Cell 22, 3348
• Varietal recovery very difficult uponbreeding (vegatatively propageted)
• Very long breeding cycle, however, provitamin Abreeding is underway at CIAT
BioCasavaPlus: Danforth Center, Grand Challenges in Global Health, BMGF; University of Freiburg – CIAT, Harvest Plus
2 Potato2. Potato(mini-pathway)CRTB, CRTI, CRTY
• Ranks 4th among staple crops directly consumed
• Carotenoid‐containing varieties areknown
Diretto et al., (2007) PLoS ONE 2(4):e350 Diretto et al., (2010) Plant Phys. 154, 899EC Programs and HarvestPlus
• Breeding is difficult (vegatativelypropagated)
g
• Product development not planned
P t2pP‐YBI
P t1 TP NTP C tY N CrtICrtBCrtYPat2p
Pat1 TP Ocs Pat2 TP NosTP CrtY Nos CrtICrtBCrtY
3. Banana -Plantain3. Banana Plantain(PSY only)
• Ranks 10th among staple crops directly consumed
I t t t l i E t Af i• Important staple in East Africa(Uganda: 222 kg/person year.
• Very low in micronutrientsVery low in micronutrients(ProvitA 2.7 µg/g; Vit E 1 µg/g; Iron 2.6 ppm, fresh weight)
• Conventional breeding: extremely difficult as bananas are essentially sterile: Most current cultivars are sterile triploids selected from the wild
• Have not been genetically improved for thousands of years
Courtesy of J. Dale, QUT Australia ,GCGH
• Huge challenges from global movement of devastating diseases
5. Maize5. Maize(PSY-CRTI)
Maize is the world´s most importantstaple crop.
The pathway proceeds beyond betacarotene. The genetic variability for highcarotenoid levels is large, but lowfor provitamin A carotenoids.
A PSY‐CRTI combination, as used in GR boosts ß‐carotene production in an Africanwhite cultivar to 60 µg/g !
Naqvi et al., PNAS, 2009
white cultivar to 60 µg/g !
Breeding approaches (ongoing) have yielded sofar ca 14 µg/g ß‐carotene
Harjes et al., Science 2008far ca.14 µg/g ß carotene.
Golden Rice breeding from ca. 2005-2010 Technology Development
GR2 events were bred into selected rice cultivars (MAS)Examples:
IR64 & IR36: Mega-varieties, broad Asian coverage BRRI dhan 29 : Most popular boro rice variety in BangladeshPSB Rc82: Most popular in the PhilippinesOS 6561: Most popular in VietnamChehirang: Leading variety in Indonesia (with IRRC) & Stacking Zinc iron lysine & agronomic traits& Stacking Zinc, iron, lysine & agronomic traits
Golden Rice NetworkIRRI (Int.), lead
Philrice (Philippines)
TNAU (India)
DRR (India)Philrice (Philippines)
BRRI (Bangladesh)
CLRRI (Vi t )
DRR (India)
Huazhong Univ. (China)
IRRC (I d i )CLRRI (Vietnam)
IARI (India)
IRRC (Indonesia)
GR Network members are licenseesTechnology Development
GR Network members are licenseesSome key license terms:
In developing countries
Granted rights for humanitarian use:
de e op g cou esResource-poor farmers(earning < 10 000 $ p.a.)In public germplasmIn public germplasmNo charge for the technologyReplanting is allowedNational trade is allowedNational trade is allowed
ObligationsObligationsRegulatory imperative – national or international regulationsNo export (except other licensees)
Breeding led to event selectionTechnology Development
gGMO regulation is based on the „event“. (There can be only one!)
St ti i t Si GR2 t ll i l l i t t i t tiStarting point: Six GR2 events, all single locus intact integration
Whi h t( ) d i t tWhich event(s) produce consistentlevels of povitamin A acrosscultivars?
Which event(s) reproduceconsistently the characteristics ofythe recurrent parents?
And the big question :And the big question :Which level of provitamin A must be
Golden Rice Network meeting 2009
Members agree to lead & backup eventdelivered by GR to be effective? Members agree to lead & backup event.
Bioavailability/Bioconversion of GRPotential of GR
Bioavailability/Bioconversion of GRConducted at TUFTS University.Five adults.
Tang et al. (2009) Am J Clin Nut r89:1776–83
Very good bioavailability of 3.8 : 1 !
Reg.: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov NCT00680355
Follow-up study in China63 children, marginally vit A deficient, 6-8 yr.
Reg.: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov ID NCT00680212.Tang et al. (2012) Am J Clin Nutr 96: 658-664
Provitamin A in GR is highly bioavailablePotential of GR
g y
50 g (dry weight) of Golden Rice (20 µg/g) can provide ~60% of
the Recommended Daily Allowance (RDA) - ca. 100% of the Estimated Average Requirement
(EAR) - for vitamin A for 6-8 year old Chinese
children.
Greenpeace, 2001Tang et al. (2012) Am J Clin Nutr 96: 658-664
50 grams of Golden Rice can make a large difference
Tony AlfonsoyPhilRice
Potential of GR
Emerging consent
“Since a large proportion of vitamin A–deficient children and their mothers reside in rice-consuming gpopulations, particularly in Asia, Golden Rice should substantially reduce the prevalence and severity of y p y fvitamin A deficiency, and prevent at least hundreds of thousands of unnecessary deaths and cases of f y fblindness every year”.
Dr Alfred Sommer‐ Dr. Alfred Sommer ‐Professor and Dean Emeritus
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
36
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
Ex-ante analysesPotential of GR
ySuggest that Golden Rice is most cost-effective
Case studies in India, Bangladesh, The Philippines
India Cost per DALY savedHighest efficiency
Cost per DALY savedLowest efficiency
Supplementation 134 $ 599 $
Golden Rice 3 $ 19 $
WHO effectiveness standard for DALYs saved : $ 620 – 1,850World Bank effectiveness standard for DALYs saved: $ 200
The Current GR Project (2011 – 2014)I l GR i h Phili i (fi l h) d B l d h
Where it stands
International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) Administration and coordination
Implement GR in the Philippines (first launch) and Bangladesh
Technical supportCapacity building, and safety research
Phili i Ri R h I tit t (PhilRi )Philippine Rice Research Institute (PhilRice)Bangladesh Rice Research Institute (BRRI)
Performance and safety researchMarket introductionMarket introduction
Biosafety Resource NetworkAdvice on regulatory mattersCompilation of the Regulatory Dossier
SeedStories & Natl. PartnersC i iCommunication
Helen Keller International (HKI) Evaluate the efficacy of Golden Rice to impact vitamin A status
38
Evaluate the efficacy of Golden Rice to impact vitamin A status
University of FreiburgNext generation of GR
GR Projects in India, Vietnam , China and Indonesia runon National funding and are not on the same timelines
Project aimsWhere it stands
Move GR through the regulatory process & prove safety
Molecular data sets
Screenhouse evaluation
Confined field trials in one location
Multilocational field trials data collectionMultilocational field trials, data collection
Examples:
Prove in the field that yield pest resistance and grain
First confined field trial, IRRI, 2008
− Prove in the field that yield, pest resistance, and grain
qualities are as before.
D t t i i− Data on protein expression
Cooking and taste tests
Compositional analyses…..etc.
Project aimsWhere it stands
jAssessing safetyGolden Rice is being analyzed according to internationally accepted g y g y pguidelines for the safe use of modern biotechnology.
1. Codex Alimentarius of the FAO and WHOGuideline for the Conduct of Food Safety Assessment from Recombinant-DNA Plants (CAC/GL 45-2003)Food Safety Assessment from Recombinant-DNA Plants Modified for Nutritional or Health Benefits: Annex 2 (2008)
2. OECD Consensus Guidelines
3. Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety
Philippines regulations are based on these guidelines.
The Philippines have approved seven GMO crops for food and feed.
(http://agbios.com/dbase.php),
Project aimsWhere it stands
jAssessing safetyGolden Rice is being analyzed according to internationally accepted g y g y pguidelines for the safe use of modern biotechnology.
1. Codex Alimentarius of the FAO and WHOGuideline for the Conduct of Food Safety Assessment from Recombinant-DNA Plants (CAC/GL 45-2003)Food Safety Assessment from Recombinant-DNA Plants Modified for
PhilRice and BRRI plan to submit all safety information to their national government
Nutritional or Health Benefits: Annex 2 (2008)
2. OECD Consensus Guidelines
information to their national government regulators during 2013 in the Philippines and
2015 in Bangladesh
3. Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety
2015 in Bangladesh
Philippines regulations are based on these guidelines.
The Philippines have approved seven GMO crops for food and feed.
(http://agbios.com/dbase.php),
Beyond GR approval
What do people think?
& additional stakeholders
Talking to peopleBeyond GR approval
Talking to people
Perception can changeBeyond GR approval
Introduction of Orange‐Fleshed Sweet Potato in Uganda and Mozambique by HarvestPluswww. harvestplus.org
Jaarsveld et al., (2005) Am. J. Clin Nutr. 81, 1080Hotz et al., (2012) Brit. J. Nutr. 108, 163‐176
Reaching those in needBeyond GR approval
Reaching those in needA delivery program is being designed to ensure that Golden Rice is acceptable and accessible in vitamin A deficient communities.
The aim: Communities could have ongoing access to Golden Rice without any additional aid or intervention
Golden Rice would be theirs to choose to grow and consume as they do with other rice.
Demonstrating EfficacyBeyond GR approval
Demonstrating Efficacy
Does daily consumption of Golden Rice improve the vitamin A status of vitamin A deficient adults?
The study will be conducted under controlled community conditions to determine if eating Golden Rice every dayconditions to determine if eating Golden Rice every day improves vitamin A status and could therefore contribute to reducing vitamin A deficiency. g y
Coordinated by Helen Keller Int. and the University of y yCalifornia, Davis, working with local partners
This study will be carried out only if biosafety is confirmed
Industries estimate ca. 10 ‐13 years for this process
SummarySummary
• Vitamin A deficiency remains a serious public health problem.
• Golden Rice and Golden Crops are a potential new and complementing way to address vitamin A deficiencycomplementing way to address vitamin A deficiency
• Leading nutrition and agricultural research organizations are working together to developorganizations are working together to develop evaluate and introduce these crops.
Financial support
• Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation• Rockefeller FoundationU S A f I t ti l D l t• U.S. Agency for International Development
• Department of Agriculture – Philippinesp g pp• National funding in additional countries
b• No contribution in €
GR2 GR1
Wild-Type
For additional information, see www.goldenrice.orgwww. irri.org/goldenrice/